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Bass Reeves: Born a Slave, Became the Greatest Lawman of the West

Dela

Born into slavery in 1838, he would later wear a silver star and hunt outlaws across 75,000 square miles, racking up over 3,000 arrests and surviving 32 years of shootouts without a single wound. He even had to arrest his own son. This is the true story of Bass Reeves.

This episode unpacks the historical record of one of the first Black deputy U.S. Marshals west of the Mississippi, a man whose reality outshines any Hollywood fiction. We trace how exile and survival in Indian Territory forged the ultimate frontier detective, and explore why he was nearly erased from American memory for a century.

  • How a fight over a poker game with his enslaver's son turned him into a fugitive who learned Native languages, tracking, and the land itself
  • His recruitment at age 37 into Judge Isaac Parker's force, and the inverted power dynamic of a former slave enforcing federal law on white outlaws
  • The tactical genius behind his disguises, his unified .44-40 ammunition, and his takedowns of killers like Jim Webb
  • The wrenching 1902 case in which he insisted on personally arresting his own son Benny for murder
  • The theory by historian Art T. Burton that Reeves, a white-horse-riding master of disguise who handed out silver dollars, inspired the Lone Ranger

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